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The Economist had this article talking about the imminence of new licenses for the opening of banks in India.

And I put in a couple of long comments on the article. Here they are.

I will be extremely worried if
Reliance gets a banking license. And why does Indian
banking need Mr. Vikram 'Citi' Pandit's punidtry in Indian banking? Haven't American banks
including Citi, JP Morgan and all the other too-big-to-fail banks and other
financial institutions including hedge funds caused enough havoc to the
American economy? Have not the GREED of a
few men to make millions and billions of dollars per year caused enough
unemployment for millions of Americans? We do not want a repeat
of the mistakes of America.

So, obviously I have to paste that comment on my blog and make a blog post out of it!

1) Who's that Duncan Fletcher guy pictured with Dhoni? Anyway, neither do I know nor do I wish to know. I just wish people of India would stop making Gods out of silly young men that cricketers are. Even compared to the cricket that I grew up with, the days of Srikanth, Amarnath, Vengsarkar, Azhar, Sachin, Ganguly, Laxman, and Dravid, now the game is all too commercialized. Too much cricket, too much money, too many crores (and girls) dangling in front of talent-less young men.

2) What a fall when you consider that we started with "Yug-purush" such as Nehru to today's "half-purush" such as Rahul Gandhi and Manmohan Singh. Why did the people of India elect these jokers in 2004? And re-elect in 2009? But then again, what is the alternative before the billion poor of this country? No, Modi is certainly not who I wa…

It's probably only if you live in a First World country that you start pondering the 'Big Questions' when a man gets killed/murdered/lynched/hacked or dies naturally.

Take a look at this Guardian article where the writer is wondering ... rather proclaiming that she STILL HAS FAITH in Humanity despite witnessing the Woolwich murder.

One has to be really ... ummm delicate perhaps to be someone who can be moved to ponder the big questions when one person dies. So I was driven to put in this comment on The Guardian article:

People in
developed nations can be so coddled!
Come to
India or go visit and live in some other poor African nation.
You will see
poverty and the ramifications thereof left, right and center.
Then, we
shall see how much faith in humanity you will be left with.

Sorry if that headline has been already used somewhere in the avalanche
of articles on the matter.

This profile of Mr. Phaneesh Murthy is particularly good. He was clearly a crazy smart guy.
Sadly, the reactions in India have been so predictable — basically just
'follow the herd' of American Puritanical morality.
Europeans have moved on but sadly Indians are unable to move beyond
aping Americans.
The reactions have been so crazily same in terms of vilifying Phaneesh
Murthy that it's almost hilarious but this is a sad incident so hilarity is
clearly not something which is called for here.
I mean, is THIS the only SOLUTION that we can think of !?!?
They had a relationship for a year or more, right?
They were ADULTS, is not it?

Here's an impromptu and completely unplanned reflection linking
these two rather disparate issues. The only cricket matches I can remember watching (may be I watched as much as
50% of both the matches) in the last decade were the India-Pakistan semi-final
and India-Sri Lanka final of the 2011 World Cup. So all this brouhaha over IPL matches leaves me only perplexed.
Apart from authenticity issues, are not cricket matches just boringly slow?
Consider that there is a mini-break after every ball is bowled. People are willing to spend so much time and emotional energy on
these matters ... it's just baffling to me. I wish people of India found the sight of little kids on the streets begging or
picking rags shocking. Have we become so inured to these fundamental injustices
and indignities?
Cricket is so irrelevant that I won't react with more than a yawn if all the
cricketers perished in some unnatural manner ... say, a plane crash.
So, forget cricket.

The funny thing about India is that anyone who's literate is most probably English-literate as well. Of course, by English-literate, I don't mean to say that the person has necessarily mastered Shakespeare but is conversant with the English alphabet.

The spread of computers and cellphones will have an inevitable role to play in the evolution of the place for English in our lives.

Much of the scientific and technical literature exists in English as of now and pretty much ALL of the technical/engineering education happens in India using English. So at the higher end of the education spectrum, folks are all English-literate.

But the cellphone which came 'recently' has far overtaken the penetration of computers among the population so that it won't be at all unusual to find housewives in villages in veils using cellphones. These ladies may not necessarily be familiar with English. How are cellphone companies 'catering' to these customers? Are they trying? Do sav…

I
don't know that there are plenty of them. This Tehelka article deals at
length with them.I
sure hope it's true that Indian youth are making sex tapes just for fun. Because
Indians clearly need to grow up and get over their prudishness about sex. Indians
keep on PRETENDING as if sex does not exist or as if it's a bad thing. Even in
our language, there's no 'normal' word or phrase to refer to sex or porn, is
there? What's Hindi for sex? For porn? Anyways,
so much "good quality" stuff of international origin is available in
all the 'genres' of porn that Indians, if they are in the "game"
are probably laggards here as well just like India ranks 156 or something in
football. We
really need to change our mindsets and I mean in a revolutionary fashion. Porn
and sex are NOT BAD just as much as 'sati' was bad. Who'll be the Rammohan Roy
of the 21st century?

After their Google Earth, driverless cars and Google Glass projects, this is one more innovative, useful, and important project from Google.

These resources that Google is developing using Landsat imagery from NASA and USGS provide a revealing picture of how humans are transforming the planet in short spans of time.

Such continuous record has never been available before and starting from now onward or since satellites started taking pictures of the Earth's surface, these pictorial records of our planet will be maintained forever as long as humans live on Earth.

Sachi Mohanty

My favorite words at present: There are no lessons to be learnt, no
discoveries to be made, no solutions to offer. I find myself left with
nothing but a few random thoughts. One of them is that from up here I
can look back and see that although a human life is less than the blink
of an eyelid in terms of the universe, within its own framework it is
amazingly capacious so that it can contain many opposites. One life can
contain serenity and tumult, heartbreak and happiness, coldness and
warmth, grabbing and giving — and also more particular opposites such as
a neurotic conviction that one is a flop and a consciousness of success
amounting to smugness.

I think I am a born rebel or a subversive. I am definitely an atheist. I sometimes feel that in a country as suffocatingly religious as India, some of us have to go to the other extreme as a counterweight to all the religious blindness which is there.